
I’ll be part of the SFWA Virtual Constellation Series On March 21, 2026
Registration is free.
Tracey Baptiste, Gabrielle Byrne, Michelle Knudsen, and I will be reading Saturday, March 21, from 2:00 to 3:30 pm Eastern Time.


I’ll be part of the SFWA Virtual Constellation Series On March 21, 2026
Registration is free.
Tracey Baptiste, Gabrielle Byrne, Michelle Knudsen, and I will be reading Saturday, March 21, from 2:00 to 3:30 pm Eastern Time.


Looking for something fun to do this weekend?
Come the the Baltimore Book Festival
I’ll be at the Science Fiction and Fantasy Association table most of the weekend.

Come say hi and pick of some new books.

Sometimes it’s hard to be who you are meant to be.
Especially when your powers can get you killed.
Eighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers eight years after a meteor devastates earth’s population.
Her power to heal may be overshadowed by more destructive abilities. Fleeing the persecution of those like her, Tatiana seeks refuge in a small town she once visited. But this civil haven, in a world where society has broken down, is beginning to crumble.
Only by harnessing the very forces that haunt her can Tatiana save her friends…and herself.

Plagued by memories not her own, a young hummingbird struggles to decipher the visions and powers that set her apart from her fellow birds. But the road to awareness is fraught with danger that could doom her to repeat history.
One step toward understanding.
One stride toward survival.
One leap toward flying free from the past.
Sometimes a blessing can be a curse.
Young Maya bears the mark of the moon goddess, a sign that would doom her to be sacrificed in her village where the death god is revered. Forced to dye her golden eyes dark, Maya lives in constant fear of discovery. To save her family and the village’s future, she must find the courage to stand up to the high priest before he can bring the death god into this world.

A Hidden Past – A Deadly Secret
Gifted with the ability to wolf-talk, Kara has lived with the wolves since she lost her memories eight years ago. Now at sixteen, snippets of her past send her searching for answers.
But the warm welcome she receives in the human village hides more danger than life with the pack.


The Baltimore Book Festival is back and I will be there on Sunday, September 29th from 2:00-3:00 PM!
The entire festival is free, so come have fun!
The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association (SFWA) has a booth and a stage at the Peabody Heights Brewery on E 30th Street.

I’ll be at the SFWA booth so stop by and say hello.
While you’re there, you can get some great books.
SFWA Booth & Stage
Peabody Heights Brewery, 401 E 30th St, Baltimore 21218
Saturday 9/28 Booth hours: 12-5
Sunday 9/29 Booth/Panels/Signings: 11-6
A schedule and map is on the Book Festival website.

Sometimes a blessing can be a curse.
Young Maya bears the mark of the moon goddess, a sign that would doom her to be sacrificed in her village where the death god is revered. Forced to dye her golden eyes dark, Maya lives in constant fear of discovery. To save her family and the village’s future, she must find the courage to stand up to the high priest before he can bring the death god into this world.

Plagued by memories not her own, a young hummingbird struggles to decipher the visions and powers that set her apart from her fellow birds. But the road to awareness is fraught with danger that could doom her to repeat history.
One step toward understanding.
One stride toward survival.
One leap toward flying free from the past.

Sometimes it’s hard to be who you are meant to be.
Especially when your powers can get you killed.
Eighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers eight years after a meteor devastates earth’s population.
Her power to heal may be overshadowed by more destructive abilities. Fleeing the persecution of those like her, Tatiana seeks refuge in a small town she once visited. But this civil haven, in a world where society has broken down, is beginning to crumble.
Only by harnessing the very forces that haunt her can Tatiana save her friends…and herself.

A Hidden Past – A Deadly Secret
Gifted with the ability to wolf-talk, Kara has lived with the wolves since she lost her memories eight years ago. Now at sixteen, snippets of her past send her searching for answers.
But the warm welcome she receives in the human village hides more danger than life with the pack.

For many years I’ve been working to earn a membership to the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA). Until recently, the only way to join was to be published by specific qualifying markets. Publishing today is a vastly different animal than it was even a few years ago. Many talented and highly successful authors have self-published or have been published through small presses. In March of 2022, SFWA updated is membership qualifications to accommodate this changing environment.
I am a science fiction and fantasy author who has been published through small press. (Star Touched – Intrigue Publishing & several anthologies through other small press.) I’ve also self-published some of my short stories. (Look for Mark of the Goddess this fall) Sales have been good, but with the old SFWA membership requirements I didn’t qualify to join.
I am happy to say that now I do.
On May 30, I received a wonderful email saying that my application was accepted. Welcome to SFWA.
I read this at 1:30 AM Sunday morning at Balticon. On Saturday, I had moderated a panel on Getting the Most Out of Your Writing Organization, where we discussed SFWA’s new changes. Most of the other people on the panel were already SFWA members and I mentioned that I had applied. Needless to say, after two days of excitedly greeting people I hadn’t seen in three years, and reading that email, I didn’t fall asleep any time soon.
My first instinct was to announce to the world. First, I wanted to tell my family and a few authors at the con who I really liked and respected. All of them were excited for me as I bounced up and down while sharing the news. (They could have been laughing, which is still okay.) Several gave suggestions on how to navigate this brand-new open door to resources and networking. There was one person who made it clear that they thought SFWA had lowered their standards to let the riff-raff in. I tried not to let that bother me too much.
Now I’m sharing this wonderful news with you. Sorry it took so long.
Happy writing and reading.

Sometimes it’s hard to be who you are meant to be.
Especially when your powers can get you killed.
Eighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers eight years after a meteor devastates earth’s population.
Her power to heal may be overshadowed by more destructive abilities. Fleeing the persecution of those like her, Tatiana seeks refuge in a small town she once visited. But this civil haven, in a world where society has broken down, is beginning to crumble.
Only by harnessing the very forces that haunt her can Tatiana save her friends…and herself.

Plagued by memories not her own, a young hummingbird struggles to decipher the visions and powers that set her apart from her fellow birds. But the road to awareness is fraught with danger that could doom her to repeat history.
One step toward understanding.
One stride toward survival.
One leap toward flying free from the past.

A Hidden Past – A Deadly Secret
Gifted with the ability to wolf-talk, Kara has lived with the wolves since she lost her memories eight years ago. Now at sixteen, snippets of her past send her searching for answers.
But the warm welcome she receives in the human village hides more danger than life with the pack.

Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.
Dawn Vogel’s academic background is in history, so it’s not surprising that much of her fiction is set in earlier times. By day, she edits reports for historians and archaeologists. In her alleged spare time, she runs a craft business, co-edits Mad Scientist Journal, and tries to find time for writing. She is a member of Broad Universe, SFWA, and Codex Writers. Her steampunk series, Brass and Glass, is being published by Razorgirl Press. She lives in Seattle with her husband, author Jeremy Zimmerman, and their herd of cats. Visit her at http://historythatneverwas.com or on Twitter @historyneverwas.
Wolf: If you could be any animal in the universe, what would it be and why?
Dawn: A cat. Naps all day, and people give me love and food when I’m not napping. That sounds pretty excellent.
Wolf: It does indeed. What is the nicest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?
Dawn: Some might argue that it’s letting them survive situations that appear to be certain death. There’s a scene in the manuscript for Brass and Glass 3 where one character escapes an extremely dangerous situation with just a mild concussion and another character escapes basically unscathed. A crueler writer would likely have killed one and maimed the other.
Wolf: I suppose that can seem nice from the right point of view. What is the meanest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?
Dawn: In Brass and Glass: The Cask of Cranglimmering, Captain Svetlana Tereshchenko has to go to a party in order to get some information. It’s a very elegant party, and very much not her speed. So her crew dolls her up in a borrowed dress that necessitates a corset as an undergarment AND a corset as a fashion accessory, pins a very tiny hat to her hair, and sends her in on her own. Basically, any time someone gets to dress Svetlana for an event, she regrets this option immediately.
Wolf: Eek. I’d regret that too. Corsets are torture. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?
Dawn: Definitely a cat person. I’m not fond of dogs of either extreme (very small or very large), but I have found virtually no cats that I can’t come to terms with.
Wolf: Hope you’re okay with wolves. If you could have a super power, what would it be?
Dawn: I’ve wanted telekinesis since I was a kid. As I’ve gotten older, it seems even cooler. That way, when I go into a room and forget what I wanted, and then remember what it was as soon as I sit down, I could just bring the thing to me!
Wolf: Wish I could do that. Of course, remembering what you want is the hard part. Which of your characters is your favorite?
Dawn: Because I write a lot of short fiction, I’ve written a whole lot of characters, so picking one of those is nearly impossible. If we’re limiting it just to the characters in my novel series, Brass and Glass, my favorite is Indigo, the ship’s mechanic. He’s a teenage boy who was raised at the fringes of the “civilized” world, so he’s got some unusual speech patterns and other quirks. So writing him is always a bit of a challenge but also a delight, as he sees aspects of the world through a very different lens than his fellow crewmembers.
Wolf: Sounds like an interesting fellow. What is your favorite body of water and why? (river, ocean, waterfall, puddle, bottle…)
Dawn: I love the ocean, particularly the northern Pacific Ocean in the damp and dismal Pacific Northwest. I would much rather be on a cloudy gray beach than a sunny one. That being said, however, I really love water in just about any format. I feel more alive when I’m near or in the water.
Wolf: Interesting. I like the ocean as well, but am very much an east coast gal. What story are you working on now?
Dawn: At the moment, I’m working on three VERY different stories. I’ve got a sci-fi noir detective story, a space opera story, and a post-apocalyptic story with mechas and climate change that really is only barely spec fic when you peel away the trappings.
Wolf: Sounds like you’re very busy. What do you like to do when you’re not writing? (Assuming you have time.)
Dawn: Gaming, watching TV or movies, and crocheting. Normally crocheting happens while one of the other two is going on.
Wolf: Thanks for visiting. You can connect with Dawn through these links:
Website/Blog: http://historythatneverwas.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/historythatneverwasdawnvogel/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/historyneverwas
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Dawn-Vogel/e/B004Q2XCJY/ref=dp_byline_cont_ebooks_1
GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/268206.Dawn_Vogel
STAR TOUCHEDEighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers eight years after a meteor devastates earth’s population. Her power to heal may be overshadowed by more destructive abilities. Fleeing the persecution of those like her, Tatiana seeks refuge in a small town she once visited. But this civil haven, in a world where society has broken down, is beginning to crumble. Will Tatiana flee or stay and fight for the new life she has built? Only by harnessing the very forces that haunt her can Tatiana save her friends…and herself.
Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives. We’re starting 2019 off with LJ Cohen.
LJ Cohen is a Boston area novelist, poet, blogger, ceramics artist, geek, and relentless optimist. After almost twenty-five years as a physical therapist specializing in chronic pain management, LJ now uses her anatomical knowledge and myriad clinical skills to injure characters in her science fiction and fantasy novels. When not bringing home strays (canine and human), LJ can be found writing, which looks a lot like daydreaming.
LJ is active in SFWA (The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America) and Broad Universe, and blogs about publishing, general geekery, and other ephemera at http://www.ljcbluemuse.blogspot.com. A Star in the Void (book 5 of the SF/Space Opera series Halcyone Space) is her most recent novel. Derelict, the first novel in the series, was chosen as a Library Journal Self-e Select title and book of the year in 2016. For more about LJ and her books, visit http://www.ljcohen.net or https://www.amazon.com/LJ-Cohen/e/B006QL6GA0
Wolf: Thanks for joining the pack. You’ve just been turned into a plant. Describe yourself.
LJ: A perennial, my leaves emerge every year starting in the late spring or early summer. Spindly stalks grow amid the leaves and can reach four feet high. From the tips of my stalks, buds swell and each bud becomes a long, wide colorful flower. I come in many varieties, some carefully developed for selective gardeners, others emerging from the side of the road, blooming for no one in particular.
While each of my flowers only blooms for a single day, with so many buds, I can be in continuous bloom for months.
I am considered a weed by some, but I see myself as simply adaptable and hardy. I can grow in almost any soil and in a large variety of conditions.
Given enough time, I will spread year by year and become a hedge. But I am also happy to be divided and planted in new ground – both my old plant and the new will thrive. Winter will not destroy my bulbs. Nor will a gardener’s neglect.
Wolf: Sounds nice. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?
LJ: Definitely a dog person. While I didn’t grow up with any animals (my mother was a fastidious housekeeper and didn’t like the chaos pets brought), I’d always been drawn to dogs. I’ve had dogs now as an adult since I got married and was gifted with a 12 week old puppy! (Not your typical wedding gift!)
We have been owned by an assortment of pups ever since, all rescues. Our current dogs are a Jack Russel mix (Dustin) and a border collie mix (Mya).
Since I work from home, I am around them most of the time. They have beds in my office, which has radiant heat. Once it gets turned on in late fall, it’s their favorite room in the house.
I’m certain that dogs exude a special kind of gravitational wave that makes it nearly impossible to get up from the sofa when they curl up nearby.
Wolf: So true. While walking in the woods you come across…
LJ: A faded blue police box, shaded by a canopy of trees. There is a sign with white lettering on the front. The words are blurred, impossible to read.
The birds have stopped singing. The wind fails. The trees still.
I pause with my hand on the handle. I expect it to be cold. Roughened by the rust. It is smooth. Warm. A surge of heat moves through me and I’m very aware of my own heartbeat in the sudden silence.
I look back at where I came from. There are no footprints in the deep leaf litter. The forest path is obscured in a swirling fog. I turn back to the box. The blue is now a clear and vibrant hue. Why did I ever think the box was old?
A beam of low sunlight pierces the tree branches and illuminates the bottom line on the curious sign: Pull to Open.
Wolf: Please say hi to the Doctor form me. If you could have a super power, what would it be?
LJ: To understand all the languages in the world. I would love to be able to travel and hear the music in the local language and understand a place the way someone born there does. To be able to communicate with anyone, without the barrier of an unfamiliar language between us would be amazing.
Wolf: The main character in my WIP can do that. I’m not good at learning new languages. Which of your characters is your favorite?
LJ: I’m not sure I have a favorite, per se, but the character whose creation most delighted me was that of Aeon from THE BETWEEN, book 1 of the Changeling’s Choice series.
He was not a planned character. I was writing a scene after my protagonist Lydia had been taken into Faerie and told she was a changeling. In order to clear her mind and cope with her anxiety, she goes for a run in what turns into a hedge maze. Lost and resting in a clearing, she struggles to understand her new reality. She asks aloud, “Who am I?”
At that moment, my fingers typed this reply: “That’s an interesting question.”
I had no idea who was there with her and why. But I know I needed to find out.
I remember that moment of creation with absolute clarity.
That character became Aeon. He was an ancient Fae who’d been bound to the maze. I thought he’d be a minor character, but he had different ideas. So much so, that his history turned into the backdrop and major conflict of the sequel TIME AND TITHE.
Wolf: Amazing how our characters tell us what to do, isn’t it? What is your favorite body of water and why? (river, ocean, waterfall, puddle, bottle…)
LJ: In my 20s I had the opportunity to learn how to sail when my then boyfriend’s (now spouse’s) father bought a sailboat. I spent many hours on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland sailing that boat. One of my favorite sounds in the world is the sound of waves lapping against the hull, so any body of water that has a tide feels like home to me.
Wolf: What story are you working on now?
LJ: It doesn’t have a name as of yet. It’s a totally different world from either my Fae Changeling books or my space opera series (Halcyone Space). It’s broad themes are inspired from this verse by Rabbi Tarfon: “It is not your responsibility to finish the work of perfecting the world, but you are not free to desist from it either.”
Multiple worlds are connected in the quantum realm. Most are safely sealed off. Most have no knowledge that they are but one in an infinite multitude.
A few people on a few scattered worlds can see though the multiverse. Most of those go mad. Fewer still are able to bear the burden of so many possibilities. Those are seers and are either considered cursed or blessed. Though the reality is some of both.
Perhaps one in a billion has the ability to slip from world to world and becomes a Traveler. But always, there is balance. A Traveler comes, a Traveler goes, never more than any world can bear, treading lightly to encourage balance. Until now.
Three individuals from three different worlds are drawn to one another through the thinning walls between the worlds. None of these three are Travelers in truth. But they are all that is left. For they discover something is hunting Travelers and obliterating them and the balance they bring from the multiverse.
Together, they must rescue each other and fight a foe they cannot name to heal the worlds before the walls dissolve for good.
Wolf: Cool. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?
LJ: My other major creative outlet is ceramics. I make functional ware both on the wheel and by slab building. I’ve always been a tactile/kinesthetic learner and working with clay is extremely relaxing.
I also love to cook. Making soup – especially in wintertime – is one of my favorite things to do. Especially when I can feed friends and family.
So between cooking and ceramics, I can both make the food and the bowl it’s served in. 🙂
Wolf: I love clay, especially hand-building.
Connect with LJ through these links:
http://www.ljcbluemuse.blogspot.com
www.ljcohen.net
www.facebook.com/ljcohen
www.twitter.com/lisajanicecohen
https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B006QL6GA0

A. L. Kaplan
Eighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers eight years after a meteor devastates earth’s population. Her power to heal may be overshadowed by more destructive abilities. Fleeing the persecution of those like her, Tatiana seeks refuge in a small town she once visited. But this civil haven, in a world where society has broken down, is beginning to crumble. Will Tatiana flee or stay and fight for the new life she has built? Only by harnessing the very forces that haunt her can Tatiana save her friends…and herself.
Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.
Bud Sparhawk has been a three-time novella finalist for SFWA’s Nebula award and has appeared in two Year’s Best anthologies. His short work was recently published in the BEST OF DEFENDING THE FUTURE and MAN and MACHINE anthologies, both by eSpec Books. He has also published a collection of twenty of his “best” short stories published in the last decade as NON-PARALLEL UNIVERSES. His new novel SHATTERED DREAMS will be released this summer. He has previously produced two novels DISTANT SEAS and VIXEN. He has published two collections SAM BOONE: FRONT TO BACK, and DANCING WITH DRAGONS. These and other novels and collections are available on Amazon.
His most recent stories will appear in Analog and Intergalactic Medicine Show later this year.
A complete bibliography can be found in WIKI and at: http://budsparhawk.com. Bud also writes an occasional blog on the pain of writing at http://budsparhawk.blogspot.com
Wolf: If you could be any animal in the universe, what would it be and why?
Bud: Babble fish, just because.
Wolf: That would make communications easier when you travel. What is the nicest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?
Bud: Put them out of their misery, but in a good way.
Wolf: I can see that. What is the meanest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?
Bud: Prolong their agony as long as possible before revealing the resolution. Readers enjoy watching someone else twist in the wind. The trick is to keep them spinning but only for so long, then put both the character in the reader out of their misery.
Wolf: I think writers are part torturers. We’re really nasty to our characters. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?
Bud: I’ve lived with both and loved them all despite knowing that they will eventually die and leave me heartsick.
Wolf: I know what you mean. I can’t imagine life without pets. While walking in the woods you come across…
Bud: An anomaly that establishes time, place, character and plot. From there who knows what will happen and where the story will go.
Wolf: I like that. If you could have a super power, what would it be?
Bud: Writing well and more often.
Wolf: I’d like that one as well. There is a door at the end of a dark, damp corridor. You hear rumbling. What do you do?
Bud: Wish I hadn’t eaten that big burrito and hoping this is the door to the toilet.
Wolf: 😊 The world is about to end. What is the first thing you do?
Bud: Proofread the announcement and make a few changes to make it scan better, after all, writers must have standards.
Wolf: I like your sense of humor. What five items would you want to have in a post-cataclysmic world?
Bud: Chocolate, wine, a good book, and two friends.
Wolf: Your cataclysm is much more relaxed than mine. Which of your characters is your favorite?
Bud: The character of Sweeney, an angry grunt who rises above himself and spans the galaxy in his millions. He is the strongest and most interesting of the three protagonists in SHATTERED DREAMS, my new novel coming out this summer from eSpec books.
Wolf: Sounds like an interesting person. What is your favorite body of water and why?
Bud: The Chesapeake Bay, which has the finest sailing in the world. (And the crabs ain’t bad either.)
Wolf: What story are you working on now?
Bud: Currently I’m trying to get two of my novels finished and working on three short stories, one of which looks like it will be a novella.
Wolf: What do you like to do when you’re not writing?
Bud: Reading anything I can get my hands on, but mostly science-fiction.
Wolf: You can connect with Bud at http://budsparhawk.com and http://budsparhawk.blogspot.com. Don’t forget to follow him on Facebook and Twitter.
Check out the Epic Science Fiction Adventures Kickstarter campaign which includes Bud’s book, Shattered Dreams, and Christopher Bennett’s book, Among the Wild Cybers. http://tiny.cc/scifi